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Building Interactive Dashboards in Microsoft 365 Excel

You're reading from   Building Interactive Dashboards in Microsoft 365 Excel Harness the new features and formulae in M365 Excel to create dynamic, automated dashboards

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803237299
Length 420 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Michael Olafusi Michael Olafusi
Author Profile Icon Michael Olafusi
Michael Olafusi
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Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1 – Dashboards and Reports in Modern Excel FREE CHAPTER
2. Chapter 1: Dashboards, Reports, and M365 Excel 3. Chapter 2: Common Dashboards in Lsarge Companies 4. Part 2 – Keeping Your Eyes on Automation
5. Chapter 3: The Importance of Connecting Directly to the Primary Data Sources 6. Chapter 4: Power Query: the Ultimate Data Transformation Tool 7. Chapter 5: PivotTable and Power Pivot 8. Chapter 6: Must-Know Legacy Excel Functions 9. Chapter 7: Dynamic Array Functions and Lambda Functions 10. Part 3 – Getting the Visualization Right
11. Chapter 8: Getting Comfortable with the 19 Excel Charts 12. Chapter 9: Non-Chart Visuals 13. Chapter 10: Setting Up the Dashboard's Data Model 14. Chapter 11: Perfecting the Dashboard 15. Chapter 12: Best Practices for Real-World Dashboard Building 16. Index 17. Other Books You May Enjoy

Summary

This chapter has been a very interesting one as we covered some of the new types of functions in Excel. The dynamic array functions were game-changing when they were released. They made a lot of computations and reports easy that were previously only possible via VBA and a complex setup of a pivot table. Also, the formula engine update that came along with it, giving all formulas in Excel the ability to spill into multiple cells, was in itself a bigger deal than the new dynamic array functions. Now, we can use old formulas such as SUM and COUNTIF in a way that outputs into multiple cells. And more recently, another type of function has surfaced in Excel: Lambda functions. They allow Excel users to create custom functions and do things that used to be only possible with VBA or a dizzying cocktail of functions. On the surface, they look simple and are easily replaced by other existing functions, but when you leverage the custom function capabilities of Lambda and the dynamic...

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